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Herding by South African Equity Unit Trusts: An analysis of the causes and extent of herding behaviour on the JSE Limited

This dissertation examines whether South African equity unit trusts follow each other into and out of the same shares (i.e., herd), and specifically whether such herding is motivated by intent. This dissertation ascertained intent by observing the interaction of correlated trading behaviour and stat...

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Main Author: Wagenvoorde, Guy
Other Authors: West, Darron
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Finance and Tax 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Wagenvoorde, Guy
author2 West, Darron
author_browse Wagenvoorde, Guy
West, Darron
author_facet West, Darron
Wagenvoorde, Guy
author_sort Wagenvoorde, Guy
collection Thesis
description This dissertation examines whether South African equity unit trusts follow each other into and out of the same shares (i.e., herd), and specifically whether such herding is motivated by intent. This dissertation ascertained intent by observing the interaction of correlated trading behaviour and states of the general equity market, controlled for conditions that drive spurious correlation; namely, net fund flows and momentum/ share size trading strategies. Employing the Sias measure, the empirical results reveal strong evidence of equity unit trust herding at the individual share-level for the period December 2012 – March 2020. This dissertation further examined the reputational and informational herding hypotheses and provided evidence that unit trust managers' reputational/career concerns, as well as informational incentives contributes to unit trust herding in shares, with aggregate herding 19% more prevalent in down markets than in up markets, 36% more in low relative to high market return states, 12% more prevalent in volatile markets than in tranquil markets, and 30% more in increasing relative to decreasing market volatility states. However, this dissertation found only statistically weak evidence of herding motivated by intent under varying market states. Furthermore, there is evidence that South African equity unit trusts follow other unit trusts in large capitalisation shares (after controlling for “blue-chip” benchmark herding) and unit trusts tend to follow their own trades in small cap shares. In sum, the results provide strong evidence of herding across the unit trust industry, but this is not conclusively predicated by intent.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:45:06.507Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Department of Finance and Tax
publisherStr Department of Finance and Tax
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37023 Herding by South African Equity Unit Trusts: An analysis of the causes and extent of herding behaviour on the JSE Limited Wagenvoorde, Guy West, Darron Finance and Tax This dissertation examines whether South African equity unit trusts follow each other into and out of the same shares (i.e., herd), and specifically whether such herding is motivated by intent. This dissertation ascertained intent by observing the interaction of correlated trading behaviour and states of the general equity market, controlled for conditions that drive spurious correlation; namely, net fund flows and momentum/ share size trading strategies. Employing the Sias measure, the empirical results reveal strong evidence of equity unit trust herding at the individual share-level for the period December 2012 – March 2020. This dissertation further examined the reputational and informational herding hypotheses and provided evidence that unit trust managers' reputational/career concerns, as well as informational incentives contributes to unit trust herding in shares, with aggregate herding 19% more prevalent in down markets than in up markets, 36% more in low relative to high market return states, 12% more prevalent in volatile markets than in tranquil markets, and 30% more in increasing relative to decreasing market volatility states. However, this dissertation found only statistically weak evidence of herding motivated by intent under varying market states. Furthermore, there is evidence that South African equity unit trusts follow other unit trusts in large capitalisation shares (after controlling for “blue-chip” benchmark herding) and unit trusts tend to follow their own trades in small cap shares. In sum, the results provide strong evidence of herding across the unit trust industry, but this is not conclusively predicated by intent. 2023-02-23T10:37:39Z 2023-02-23T10:37:39Z 2022 2023-02-21T07:28:51Z Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37023 eng application/pdf Department of Finance and Tax Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle Finance and Tax
Wagenvoorde, Guy
Herding by South African Equity Unit Trusts: An analysis of the causes and extent of herding behaviour on the JSE Limited
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Herding by South African Equity Unit Trusts: An analysis of the causes and extent of herding behaviour on the JSE Limited
title_full Herding by South African Equity Unit Trusts: An analysis of the causes and extent of herding behaviour on the JSE Limited
title_fullStr Herding by South African Equity Unit Trusts: An analysis of the causes and extent of herding behaviour on the JSE Limited
title_full_unstemmed Herding by South African Equity Unit Trusts: An analysis of the causes and extent of herding behaviour on the JSE Limited
title_short Herding by South African Equity Unit Trusts: An analysis of the causes and extent of herding behaviour on the JSE Limited
title_sort herding by south african equity unit trusts an analysis of the causes and extent of herding behaviour on the jse limited
topic Finance and Tax
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37023
work_keys_str_mv AT wagenvoordeguy herdingbysouthafricanequityunittrustsananalysisofthecausesandextentofherdingbehaviouronthejselimited